Turkmen of Kirkuk, Iraq's northern oil hub which is riven with ethnic tension, called Thursday for the government to protect them and indirectly threatened to create their own militia.
"We once again urge the government to protect Turkmen who are victims of acts of genocide," said a statement by the Iraqi Turkmen Front, the main political party representing the country's Turkish-speaking minority.
"Violence continues to harvest the lives of innocent Turkmen; their mosques, their cafes and the playgrounds of their children are all targets...abductions are continuing on the roads," the statement read.
The statement said the plight of the Turkmen is being ignored by the local and central authorities.
It demanded the "formation of a Turkmen military force within existing Iraqi military units to protect Turkmen territories."
If the demand isn't met, Turkmen may create their own militia to protect their communities, the statement implied, by quoting a verse of the Koran.
The statement was issued after the discovery Wednesday of the decapitated bodies of two young Turkmen near Tuz Khurmatou which lies on the main road between Baghdad and Kirkuk. Four Turkmen were also kidnapped near the town of Amirly on Wednesday, police said.
Turkmen represent about 5% of the Iraqi population and are concentrated around Kirkuk, 255 kilometers north of Baghdad. They have one member in the 275-seat parliament.
Kirkuk, a fragile ethnic mix of Kurds, Arabs and Turkmen, has long been a flashpoint in the country, especially with the potential revenues from the massive, and largely unexploited, oil reserves beneath the city.